Project Name Mind the Gap: Improving Dissemination Strategies to Increase Technology Adoption by Smallholders
About
The project is about improving the adoption of innovative agricultural technologies for the livestock-barley system in semi-arid Tunisia (governorates Zaghouan and Kairouan). As its name tells, it is about shrinking the gap between the innovative technologies developed under research and the amount of adoption of such ones.
Impact
Goals
The goals of this project are: to establish an impact-oriented agricultural services (governmental, private services and NGOs) , to upscale tested results (which will be described in the manual), to improve acess to relevant agricultural services especially for female farmers and eventually to increase agricultural productivity in a sustainable way.
Objectives
The objective is to address this research gap through developing and testing new and existing models of transferring sustainable technology packages to smallholder farmers.
Impact pathways
The scientific interest of the present research proposal is to test new and existing models of technology transfer rigorously and to evaluate them (output 1) .
The 700 female and male farmers participating in the experiments will receive specific improvements. Through the different combinations of improved access to inputs, technical information and or market information, according to the respective treatment group, the female and male farmers will be able to reduce their forage costs by improved forage yields and forage production technologies. Further, farmers will be able to increase their income by selling more and better quality lambs through improved sheep production and feeding technologies (Output 2) as well as by reducing their transaction costs through improved access to retailers and a market price information system (Outcome 1). This will lead to increased agricultural productivity within the group of the 700 participating farmers (Goal 4). However, the scientific interest goes far beyond these specific improvements for the farmers directly participating in the research. The aim is to compare adoption, productivity and income (as outcome variables) in order to evaluate the most cost-effective technology transfer options (Output 1). Based on this evaluation a strategy for the Tunisian government is developed on how to increase and facilitate the adoption of innovative agricultural technologies in a cost effective and gender sensitive way (Output2). Based on the results of the evaluation of the RCT experiment a manual, brochures and blogs are elaborated and published. The information of the policy manual will be published on the web as well as the similarity maps that will facilitate scaling to other WANA countries. The results of the RCTs are further published in peer-reviewed journals as well as in policy briefs and presented at conferences and workshops .The strategy developed, the web based manual and the publications will initiate a process of organizational learning and discussions within the CGIAR system, the NARES agencies, within the GIZ agricultural program, the GIZ innovation center and with other development stakeholders on how to organize technology transfer in a more cost-effective way (Outcome 1). Based on the organizational learning process agricultural services (governmental, private services and NGOs) will be able to apply more cost-efficient and results oriented technology transfer strategies (Goal 1). It is also expected to initiate other RCT experiments in other WANA and/or Sub-Saharan Africa countries to test other model components of innovative technologies in order to scale the results (Goal 2). The ultimate goals are to increase smallholder farmers' access to relevant agricultural services and to improve farmers' access (especially female farmers) to innovative technologies (Goal 3). This will increase agricultural productivity and make use of underutilized agricultural potentials (Goal 4) and lead to more stable and higher per capita income for intensifiable households for at least 56,000 indirect beneficiary households within the communities of arid and semi-arid Tunisia. However by scaling the results to the entire WANA region, even more female and male farmers can be reached (CRP 1.1, IDO 2).
Six e-learning modules in Arabic and French are now available free of charge for extension services officers and trainers on topics ranging from cactus pear production, beekeeping and supplementary irrigation among others.
On World Bee Day, ICARDA outlines how we contribute to pollinator protection, how farmers can benefit from wild pollinators, and how we use SMS to improve knowledge and services for honey producers.
A study in Tunisia explored the factors that influence the adoption of new agricultural technologies. Lessons learned will enhance the performance of the country’s extension services and raise farmer`s/agricultural productivity.
Proven agricultural technologies that can improve lives often have low adoption rates due to lack of effective service delivery systems and enabling policy environment. Agricultural extension is a common method to introduce technologies. However...
The literature reviewed here is global in its focus to attend to broad trends in the field and practice of agricultural extension. We do not aim for an extensive literature review but to identify implications for not including gender, ways to do so...
This document is designed to help researchers apply RCTs so they can gain a more accurate insight into the impacts of different extension strategies in different locations. It provides information on the benefits of an RCT approach in comparison to...
Une évaluation approfondie du système de vulgarisation agricole tunisien montre que des paquets technologiques améliorés destinés au système de production agricole mixte élevage-orge en Tunisie semi-aride permettent d’économiser jusqu’à 40 % des...
The brochure describes the gender aspects of extension in Tunisia and the scientific gender approach of the Mind the Gap project, including recommandation for extension services
La brochure décrit les aspects sexospécifiques de la vulgarisation en Tunisie et l'approche scientifique du genre du projet 'Mind the Gap', y compris des recommandations pour les services de vulgarisation
Low and slow adoption of innovative technologies among smallholder farmers in Tunisia is a key agricultural
development problem partly related to the existing technology transfer approach used in the country.
The objective of this study is to analyse...
With a clear decrease in the agricultural households’ incomes, the increase of food and production
factors prices, and the negative effects of climate change on agricultural production, smallholders’
farmers are facing food insecurity challenge...